STAR OF THE NORTH. *. W. WEAVER, TDITOR. illooinsbur* Thursday May 11, 1838. Fast Times. Jn these days distance is nothing to the Traveller, and we live in times that are cm pbilicallv fast. Last Friday ahernoon at half past threa we started upon H flying tour through Schuylkill county—arrived at Port Clinton it lime for an excellent supper in The depot rooms—at 7 o'clock took the even ing train of cars for Poltsville, where we de spatched a little business— took an hour's hearty laugh in Jerry Merrifield's Theattei and enjoyed a good night's rest at Colonel Ktrrcher's "Exchange." In the morning af ter breakfast we look a ride through the half dczon towns of the ooaf'region East of Potts lillojin those mountains which have become the hives of countless human beings, and gwnrm with tho thousands who perforate them like a honey-comb; teeming all over and all Ihnugh with life and toil. We arrived at Tumaqua in limoto execute alitllo more bu siness; and then took the Express train ol cars by which we reached home at noon on Saturday. Some of these noons we may start on an other tour—takes look at Niagara next morn ing, and return home in time for supper.— Or, on some Monday morning we may start for Kansas wiih Ihe word behiod us that we will be "back next week." A New Hot-Blast Antharaoiie Furnace has been erected at Williamsport, Lycoming county, in this State, by Messrs. Bingham, JMcKiniiey bi Co. The arrangement for feed ing the furnace, the Press of that place says, ia novel, economical and ingenious. A largo stock car with circular iron body and trap bottom, is drawn up an inclined pi me to the luntiel head, by the engine, when the body of the car striking a lever, disconnects it from Ihe gearing, and the car is thence run by hand npon the-track over the opening, and the stock deposited hy the movement of a lever connected with the trap bottom ; re turning, life descent of the car is regulated at pleasure, by means of a double break. HON. WALTER T. CowrrT, who died at Macon, Geo., on the 7th inst., was a promi neni Slate Rights Democrat of that State, an eminent lawyer, and often officiated as a Methodist clergyman. He represented Geor gia in the House of Representatives, many years ago, and was subsequently chosen U. S. Senator. On the expiration -of his term In the Senate, he retired to private life. Mr. Colquitt was a great natural orator, and bad, wbi'e he look part in politics, a leading in iiuer.ee in Georgia. t3T Judge Jordan has decided lo grant tsv ■ern licenses until the Ist of October; but at Williamsport last week he decided that a county Treasurer has no authority to issue licenses to fnerchants for the sale of liquor, jude Pearson has decided that the Court has no authority to grant licenses at this lime, bat that the county Treasurer raty. U" We are pleased to notice that a new post-office has been established at the Rail voad station near this place, to be called''Ru perl," and Mr. George S. Gilbert, the gentle manly Tkgeut of the Cattawissa Cgmpay, ap pointed Postmaster. QT The Governor has advertised the Main Line, including Railroads and Canal, from Philadelphia to Piltaburg, and the appurte nances, for sale by publio outcry at the " Philadelphia Exchange, Tuesday the 24th of July next, at half-past 7 o'clock in the evening. iy Col. Henry L. Kinney of fillibuster notoriety was oil Tuesday evening arrested •I Philadelphia on an indictment for viola tion Ihe neutrality laws of the United Stales. He surrendered himself, and walked into Court to offer 84,500 bail, belore Judge Kane. A BP" Judge Conynghtnr. last week directed that tavern licenses should on their face say Ihe holder could only sell liquor until the Ist of October next, and not to any minor, or person of known intemperate habits, nor on Sunday. BP" ON Monday week ihe Councils of the city of Erie, Pa,made an additional subscrip tion of 8200,000 to the slock of the Sunbury •nd Erie Railroad, providing that if is expen ded on their end of Ihe line, and that the work be commehoed within a reasonable line. iy "Sag Niohli" (Say Nothings) is a aew secret political organization rising tip in opposition to the "Nix Welters" (Know Nothings.) Two secret societies rnling in dependent freemen is a sublime state of af fairs for an enlightened, republican country, truly I OF Open American party conventions have been he'd in Northumberland, North ampton, Montgomery, tad we believe other counties in Pennsylvania; and numerous meetings in other States have been held for Ihe same object HAVIKO a GOOD TIME or IT. —The liquor dealers in New York, by the Recorder's de cision, have the privilege of selling as much liqnar as they please without lioense till the 4th of July next. Those who passed the prohibitory law did not anticipate this re sult X3T Now sweet potatoes are among the loxories of the season at Petersburg, Vir ginia. ISF The manuscript of Mr. Lake's com mvoteation published in oor last number tan be rein at oor office From Philadelphia to the Lakes la a day By ihe new railroad arrangement travel lers can now take the can in Philadelphia ut 6 o'clock in Ihe morning, and reach Niag ara in ihe evening of the same day. Ry this route, Detroit ia advertised to be reached in 24 hours, Chicago in 84 boors, and St. Louis in 48 bourn. There are at this time si* daily trains run ning over the Catiawissa Road—three North j ward, and three for Philadelphia. The fol lowing are the limes at which each one pas res Rupert Station, as furnished to us by Mr. Gilbert, the Agent of the Company. Trains moving South. Way Passenger Train 4. 45 A. M. Freight and Accommodation 11. 30 A. M Express 3. 15 P. M. Train) moving North. Express 11.45 P.M. Freight and Accommodation 1. 40 P. M. Way Passenger 19. 47 P. M. The way passenger and accommodation trains stop at all the stations except Union. The Express trains slop only at Williams port, Milton, Danville, Rupert, Summit, la maqua and Port Clinton. At Port Clinton, the Express traiu stops 20 minuies for passengers to take supper when going toward Philadelphia. The Ex press train which leavea Philadelphia in the morning stops 20 minutes at Williamsport for the passengers to take dinner. A Mail Train leaves Philadelphia, at 7 30, I A. M., running to Poltsville' oidy. The Night Exnros* leaves Philadelphia at 3 30 P- M, and reaches Niagara Falls at 10 30 A. M, in time lor Train to I etroil, Chicago, &o. Distances Jiom Philadelphia {via. Cattawissa It. It. ) to Niagara Falls. Manaynnk 7 Milton 172 Conshehucken 13 Umonlown 177 Norrislown 17 Mtmcy 187 Port Kennedy 21 Williamsport* 197 Valley Forge 23 Trout Run 212 Phcuuixville 27 Ralston 222 Royer'e Ford 82 Canton 237 Limerick 34 Troy 250 Poitaiown 40 F.lmira 275 Dooglasville 44 Horse Heads 280 Birdsborough 49 Millport 287 Reading 58 Havanua 293 Allliouse's 06 Jefferson J296 Mohrsville 68 Siarkey 307 Hamburg 75 Penn Yan 318 Port Clinton 78 Gorham 330 Ringgold ' 88 Canandaigna 342 Taniu(]ua 98 East BlnomfialJ 350 Summit 110 Honey Falls 363 Ring.own 123 Caledonia 375 Beaver 130 La Roy 382 Maiuville 138 Ratavia 388 .Cattawissa 145 Tonawanda 432 Rupert 147 Niagara Fails 437 Danville 154 Suspension Bridge 439 Moresburg 160 [*Liuner.] This Route with its connections, forms the shortest and most direct route to Canada and the Lakes. Only one change of Baggage between Philadelphia and Canada or the Lakes. Passengers purchasing Tickets by this lino have the privilege of stopping at any of the above points and resuming their seats at pleasure. Well managed, according to the public no tices, this must become one of tho most profitable and pleasant thoroughfares in the Union. Important lo Millers. We feor thai scarcely a njillet in Pennsyl vania has attended ;o the obligations ol the following act of the legislature, which was passed Antil 15th, 1835, and may be found under the head of inspections, section 38, Purdons Digest. It is duo to the purchaser, and community generally, that it should be complied with immediately. And as many of our millers have some six or eight dif ferent brands, they are liable to heavy pen alties for every month they continue this I old mode of business: "Every miller and bolter of flour for ex portation, shall cause his brand-mark as a foresaid to be entered with the Clerk o( the Court of quarter sessions ol the County where be resides, together with his name and place of residence, under penalty ot five dollats for every month during which he shall have exercised his said employment, without having made such entry." or A new Amorican Manufacture, that of plate glass, has been commenced in Will iamsburg, N. Y., where plates of glass ton feel wide and twenty feet long, will be made. A plate teia feet square can be made sn strong that it will hold a ton weight, and so clear that we'could read the fine print of a newspaper through a piece four inches thick. It ia a singular fact that the best English plate class is made from American Hand.— With New Jersey, possessing the propel raw material in so remarkable a degree, it is lingular that this article has been so long i in ported.— Ledger. CF The King of Belgium is a Protestant, though his subjects are mostly Catholics.— The king of Saxony ia a Catholic, though the greater part of his subjects are Protestants. The King of Greece is a Catholic, though most of his subjects are of Ilia Greek Church. Of the 15.500,000 European sbbjects of the Sul tan of Turkey, 11,370,000 are ol 'he Greek Chnroh, and 260,000 are Catholics, while only 3,800,000 are Mohommedans. II hat ii Baggage? —ln a recent tail in N. York, the question came up, whether a gold watch ia an article of wearing apparel, to be deemed baggage. The Superior Court deoi ded it ia an arlicle of wearing apparel, and when not carried about the person, but in a trunk, while travelling, ia to be deemed at baggage. Seizure of Counterfeit Money —On the Blh insl., the police of Cinoinnali, Ohio, arrested George H. Cady, and found in hit possession 35530 in counterfeit fives and lens, of the Farmers' Bank of Charleiton, Va. They sf terwarda arrested a man in the honse and found about 330,000 in the same kind of note*. DEAB EVERYWHERE.— The price of meat baa risen 15 per cent, in Paris within two months. It is now entirely beyond tbe means of the poor. . EDUCATIONAL. SCHOOLS SHOULD DE ENLARGED. If only direolors would properly classify their scholars and grade their schools, in struction could be much improved and cheapened. In all towns where it is at all practioable'all those scholars in the same stage of advancement should be sj'nt to the same school, and then there should be entire uniformity a text books. A good teacher can then instruct 70 scholars with more plensute to himself and more profit to them than he can a school ol 25 like some we have visited. Each scholar in a class will learn from Ihe answers of the others, and the advanced ones will drag the slow ones along. The teacher will be more interested with a large class thfn with a small one. The Philadelphia and Lancaster schools are twice as large as those iu this neighbor hood on on average, and yet each schol ar there receives more instruction than here In Kdinburg one teacher with the help of monitors in classes will take charge of from 100 to 600 scholars in the primary depart ments. In Baden the maximum is 80, and in Prussia schools average 40 scholars. Addition to the Schoo^Law. The laie legislature passed a supplemental school-law, which will help, to some extent, io adapt the one of last year to the warns of the people. The first seven sections relate mainly to the independent districts establish ed by special acts of Assembly. The follow ing are the other sections which possesses general interest. SECT. 8. Tlinl the state superintendent of common schools shall, OD the application ol the boards of directors of a majority of the school districts in any county of this com monwealth, stating their desire to increase | the salary ol ihe county superintendent, fix-1 t ed at nny of tho periods named in the thirty ninth section of the school law of one thou | sand eight hundred and fifty-lour, or at any subsequent triennial convention of directors, appoint the limn and piar-e of re assembling of ihe convention of directors, who shall have all the powers conlerred by the said thirty ninth section. SECT. 9. That the Pennsylvania School Journal shall be recognised as die official or gan of the depattmenl of common schools el this commonwealth, in which the current decisions made by the superintendent of common schools shall be published free of charge, together with ell official circulars and such other lettets n( explanation and instruc tion as he may find it necessary or advisable lo issue fiom time to time, including his an nual report; and the superintendent is hereby authorized lo subscribe for one ropy of said School Journal, to be ser.t lo each board of school directors in the stale, for public use, and charge the cost thereof to the contingent expenses of the department of common schools. SECT. 13. That the superintendent of com mon schools be authorized and directed to pay out the stale appropriation to the respec tive school districts, for this present school year, in all cases where bona fide efforts have been mada to" comply wuh the.provis ions of the law requiring tho schools to be kept open fofir months, but failed from want ol teachers or timely knowledge of the late law, or other cause which shall be deemed just and satisfactory lo the superintendent. Under this act such townships as Pine and Mountplensanl will receive their state appro priation, but instead of the ordinary affidavit the facts of the case must be set cut and sworn to. But districts where no efforts were made to procure teachers or to hove four months school will still fail to obtain the appropriation. ItEXIGIOUS PIIEDILECTIUNS Of the Memheri of the General At unity of the State of Pennsylvania for the year 1855 Known at the Know-Nothing Legislature. SENATE Presbyterian, - - -15 Methodist, 2 Episcopalian, - - • • 5 Baptist, .... 2 Friends or Quaker, .... 4 German ftelorm, .... 2 Lutheran, .... i AotiSeclarian .... 2 33 HOUSE or SEPnESENTATIVKS. Presbyterian, .... 33 Methodist,' - - - -25 Baptist, • • • -10 Friends or Quaker, .... 6 German Reform, .... 3 Unitarian, • . • - . l Universalis), .... 2 Lutheran, • ... 6 Episcopalian, 1 Congregalionalist, - - • 1 Free Thinker, 1 Big Church, - - ' • • - 1 Don't Know, 1 No particlar seat', . - 7 Dutch Relorm, .... I 100 Rcgisiered Letters. WASHINGTON, May 11.—The Post Office Department has issued a series-of instructions for the guidance of Postmasters, in receiving valuable letters for transmission by mail.— The plan ia to go into operation the Ist of July, on and after which letters can be regis tered and receipted for upon a fee of five cents being paid. Extraordinary care ia to be taken to ensure tbeir sale delivery. [The instructions require all letters alleged to be valuable to be registered at the office of mailing, on payment of a receipt book kept for the purpose, and kept separate from ibe regular account of mails received and sent. Tbe reoeipt book is to be kept by the postmaster or a person specially designated by him fot that strvioe and all registered letters to be receipted for oa delivery st the office of their destination.} WHOLESALE MARRYING. —Six sisters were recently married in the same night, at their house, in Somerset eouoty, Pa. From the ledger. WHERE TO DIG FOR GOLD. Every few monlha, since the discovery of the California goki fields, a rumor has been started of new aurilerous regions. Now they are said to be locafed in Virginia, now in Texas, now in the Carolinas, end now in Arkansas. Influenced by these reports, ad venturers desert home, family and avoca tion ; endure unheard-of toils; often perish miserably of disease; and generally end in utter beggary. A few, indeed, return with fortune, but they are broken in health ; but the majority come back penniless, or die alone in a foreign land. Vet all this while, there are gold fields ly ing near at home, and which may be work ed without the risks of a strange climate.— They are fields which were worked by our fathere before us; which were found eminently productive; and which offer prizes quite as great still. Fortune may be sought in them without encountering the privations of exile, the hazards of a distant venture, the lawless ness of a new settlement, or the demoraliza tion of a semi-buccaneer community. Nay! fortune is far more sure to be won, if the experience of our fathers is to be taken, by delving, mining and assaying in their fields, than in those of even Colitornia and Aus tralia. These auriferous regions are industry, economy and perseverance. No man, how ever few his original advantages, who will work these goldsn mines, but will finally secure compelance, if not wealth. It is here at home, here at our tery doors, that the wisesi men dig for gold. Selecting some one pursuit, they study or practice till they mas ter it, and then thoroughly prosecute it, con centrating all their energies for the work.— Are they merchants? They rise to be great er millionaires than ever came from San Franrisco. Are they lawyers? They win houor as well as wealth. Are they mechan ics? They soon attain lo comfortable cir cumstances, and finally often to riches, lo honors, to power, while their fellow appren tices, who sought gold fields elsewhere," have died miserable beggars abroad. WH care not what a man's pursuit may be, lie will prosper if he aticks 10 it. For tune, to he won, must be besieged. But he who runs about the world, in chase of the fickle jade, w ill find that, ignis Jotuus like, ehe always eludes his grasp. "A rolling stone," the proverb says, "gathers no moss." Men, who seek gold fields or. the other side of the globe, when industry, thrift, and en ergy are certain to yield success at home, resemble the old woman, who wasted the day in looking for her spectacles, which, all the time, were perched above her nose. Those who despair of prosperity at home rarely mend matters by going away, unless they also mend their habits of business, and, in that event, fortune would smile on them if tltey staid at home. II thoae wbo adventure in foreign gold fields would sub mit to half the privations here, which they are forced to undergo there, or would exor cise similar perseverance, they would soon discover, that, inslcad of traversing oceans to get at wealth, they could dig gold at their own doors. Exciting Times in Kansas and Missouri, CHICAGO, May 8, 1855. The Flatte Missouri Argus of the Ist inst., publishes the proceedings of a mass meet ing held at Webster, Mo., at tvhicb the fol lowing extraordinary resolutions passed:— '•That self-defer.ee requires the expulsion of every perron bringing into reproach negro slavery ; that robbers and traitors have no right to the protection of the law; that they ratify the proceedings at the l'arkville riot; that they approve of the resolutions in re gard to Methodists, and add thereto all min isters preaching prejudicial to slavery; that ibey have no arguments against abolition papers, but '-Missouri river," "bonfire" and "hemp-rope." That they pledge themselves lo go lo Kansas and help to expel those cor rupting the slaves; and that thevcall agtand mass-meeting at P&rkville on tlie Sth inst." The Hiss Affair in the Muss, Honse. Boston, May 14.—There has been much confusion and excitement in the House this afternoon. Mr. Hiss twice resumed his va cated seat, and was each time removed by the Sergeant-al-Arms, by an order of the House, passed almost unanimously It is pre sumed Mr. Hisi acted in this singular manner by the advice of his Counsel. Messrs. B. F. Bnllor and Benj. Dean, Coun- I sel for Mr. Hiss, have published an address denouncing his expulsion from the House as an arbitrary act, and intimating that the members of the House feared an impar tial developement of all the facts in the case. THE COST or BOMBARDING SEBASTOPOL.— The bombardment of Sebastopol, by the last advices, had continued for thirteen days pouring an incessant fire upon the '.own, and according to the English advices, makings steady progress against the works, though (•orlsohakofl's report, the latest, says the Al lies' fire was slackening. The iron shotfired into Sebastopol exceeding anything of the kiud that the annals of war have ever record ed. Five hundred guns, firing one hundred and twenty rounds a day, gives a total of six ty thousand rounds, which may weil be term ed an "infernal fire." as Gortachakoff oalled it. it is estimated tlial the amount of shot fired in the thirteen days of the bomhard ment'by the Allies, equalled thirty-five mill ions one buodred thousand pounds, which would cost, not including the transportation and the powder, $313,380. The powder would cost $702,000, making a total of over a million dollars. This, if it resulted in the capture of the place, would be cheap, but the correspondent of tbe London Times, who is a spectator ol the bombardment, says, in his last letter, " we are not one inch nearer the town than we were last October." The Expulsion of Hiss; BOSTON, May ll.— After an exciting night session of seven hours, the Honse, this morning at 2 o'clock, passed a resolution expelling Hiss by a vole of yeas 137, nays 15. HOARDING HOI'HES AND HOTELS. VVe have been favored with a bill passed by the Legislature of thie Stale, just closed, of which the following is a copy. It was got up, and an interest taken in its passage into a law, through the instrumentality of our friend, Parker, present member of coun cils of the city, and Jas.B. Reese, of Lehigh county; and while, more rigid and stringent than may suit the notions of many persons, it will produce much good, und save many 'a boarding-house keeper, with a large iamily of children depending upon her exertions, from being robbed weekly or monthly of a portion of her hard earnings; An Act to Protect Keepers of Hotels, Inns and ' Boarding Houses. SEC. I.—Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of this Common wealth of Pennsylvania in General Assem bly met, and it is hereby enacted by the au thority of the same, That whenever the pro prietor or proprietors of any hotel, inn or hoarding house shall provide a good, suffici ent and secure safe in the office of such ho tel or other convenient place for the safe keeping of any money, gooda, jewelry and valuables belonging to Ihe guests and board ers of such hotel, inn or boarding house, and rhull notify the guests and boarders thereof by placing in every lodging-room, parlor and public ball or other conspicuous places, printed cards or stating the fact that such Bafe is provided, in which such goods, jewelry and valuables may bo deposited, and that the proprietor or proprietors (hereof will not be responsible for said money, goods, jewelry and valuables, unless depos ited in said safe, and if any such guest or boarder shall neglect to doposit such money, goods, jewelry or valuables in such safe, the ; roprietor or proprietors aforesaid shall not be liable for any loss of such money, goods, jewelry or valuables sustained by such guest by theft or otherwise: Piovided, That nothing lierein contained shall apply to such an amount of money and such articles oi goods, jewelry and valuables as is usual, common and prudent fur atij such guest or boarder to retain'in his room or about his. person. SEC. 2.—That whenever the proprietor or proprietors of any hotel, inn or boarding hoove shell post in a conspicuous mannet as aforesaid, notices requiring said guest or boarder to boll the door of the room or rooms occupied by said guost or boarder, or in leaving ihe said room or rooms, lo lock the door, and deposit the key or keys with the proprietor or the clerk at the office, and if such guest or boarder shall neglect so to do, the proprietor or proprietors as aforesaid, shall not be liable for any baggage or such | guest or boarder which may be stolen from said room or rooms: Provided, That said proprietor or proprietors shall clearly estab lish the fact of said room or rooms having beer, left unbolted or unlocked by said guest or boarder at the time of the loss of said baegage as aforesaid. £kc. 3.—That if any person or persons with the intent lo cheat and defraud design edly by any false cr fraudulent representa tions, or by any false show of baggage, goods, or chatties, which are calculated lo deceive any hotel, inn, or boarding house keeper, shall obtain lodgings and credit in any hotel, inn, or boarding house within this Common wealth, and subsequently thereto refuse to pay for their safe, board and lodging, such 'person or persons so offending, shall upon conviction of such offence in any Court of Quarter Sessions of this Commonwealth, be punishable by imprisonment in the county jail of said county, for any period not more than three months, at the discretion of said Court, and be liable to a fine not exceeding one hundred dollars. Sic. 4 —That all proprietor or propriotora of hotels, inns and' boarding houses within this Commonwealth shall have a lien upon the goods and baggage belonging to any so journer, boarder or boarders, for any amount of indebtedness contracted for boarding, lodging or entertainment, for any period of time not exceeding two weeks, and shall have the right to detain said goods and bag gage until the amount of said indebtedness is paid, and at llio expiration of three moaths the said proprietor or propriotora may make application to any alderman or justice of the peace of the proper city, borough or county who is hereby authorized to issue his war rant to any coustable within said city, bor ough or county, and cause him to expose the said goods and baggage to public sale, after giving at team ten days' notice, by pub | lie written or printed notices, put up in throe or more public places in the ward of said city or borough, or in the township where said inn, hotel or boarding-honse is located, and after he shall have sold the same he shall make return thereof to the euid justice or alderman who shall, after payment ol all costs, and the same amount of indebtedness, pay over the balance, if any there be, to the owner or owners of said goods aod baggage; Provided, that the owner or owners of said goods and baggage shall have the right to redeem said goods and baggage at any lime within the said three months, upon paying the amount of said indebtedness, and at any time previous to the sale as aforesaid, upon paying also the additional cost established by law for the like services. Approved May 7tb, 1855. Lieut. Bonaparte'* Opinion aboat Sebar topol. BALTIMORE, May 14. —Lieut. Bonaparte, formerly of the U. S. Army, and now an of ficer of the French Army in the Crimea, writea to hia father by the last packet, that the allied forcea can at any lime take Sebas lopol, but not without a great aacrifice of their Iroopa. He doe* not aay they could keep it, after getting it. * Stnlt Agricultural Fatr. —The next Slate Agrioultuial Fair will be held at Harriaburg. the citizen* having aubacribed the *um re quired to aecure it. The annual addreaa be fore the Society will be delivered by the Hon. Frederick Watts, of Carlisle, its first Presi dent. V The Lewiaburg Democrat i* offered for sale. NEW YOU If CORRESPONDENCE. MONDAY, May 14, 1855. The ltlinoil arrived yesterday from Aspin i*all with the mails and 81,115,00# in gold dust from San Francisco. Everything Is gloomy in California—trade dull, markets overcrowded, money light, and business men financially embarassed. The mail packet Golden Age, which runs between Panama and San Francisco, was wrecked on her last trip to the latter pott, by running on a shoWing rock 216 miles above Panama. The crew and gold dust were saved by the. John L. Stephens, which took them all back to Panama. The anxiety with which Ihe arrival of the nekt steamer from Europe is looked for is intense. It appears now certain that either thejiexl steamer or the following one must necessarily bring us news either of the cap ture of Sebastopnl, or the defeat of the allies. Heavy bets among sporting men and others are pending on the result. Premonitories of Summer have made their appearance in New Yotk. The open-air Ice Creameries are in full-operation, to the man ifest delight ol the newsboys, of whom a do zen or so may now be seen surrounding a slaud near the Tribune office, each with his pennyworth of sweetened refrigeration in one hand, and a spoon in tlio other, feasting like a young Sardanapulns. There are b'g strawberries, too, or hot-bed growth, in the confectioners' windows, at five dollars a dish. Summer cravats have succeeded the moir antique and sa'.in scarfs and lies in the glass cases of the furnishing stores; and light silks, bareges, and French muslins are seen behind the plate glass fronts of the dry goods stores. The newspapers have com menced putting their accumulating rural fa vors under the separate head of "Country Board:" and the steamboat companies are out with their Summer programmes. Many of our fast youths, precocious in everything, have already donned cream-colored felts and while vests; and last Sunday, the green as pect of the Elysiun Fields, tempted quite a large delegation from " Young Germany" over to Hoboken. The first swallow has not yet parted, with glossy wing, our dusty at mosphere, but is doubtless making a bee line hither from the of Africa or . some other terra incognita. The temperature is warm onongh for.June, and the genial weather, as well as the advertisements of the " blood purifying" quack doctors, warns us to " prepare for Summer." Barnum's approaching Baby Show ia in bad oder here among persons of refitted tastes. There is a certain low sphere within which Barnum's operations succeeded well, and it is a sphere in which he in very much at home. People who are merely swindled out of twenty-fivo cents cannot afford to lose 1 their temper about such an insignificant sum. j Many will lose even twenty-five dollars, provided their curiosity on ordinary matters only is trifled 'with. A man would be a little ashamed to kick up a row about being deceived as to the genuineness of a black man turning white, a woolly horse, or any thing of that kind. Barnom should "there fore have confined his swindling operations to playing upon the lower (acuities of the human mind, with which people will allow a little trifling, art! Itingh at their folly at being taken in, and nt the low cunning of the ras cal who "did" them, while they of course hold him in contempt. Bjt it is quite anoth er thing when you attempt to mislead Ihe higher intellectual faculties of a people, their highest class o? tastes, or their moral or reli gious elements. The villian who does or at tempts to do any of these things is held in 1 just contempt, and when there is no stat ute or common law to punish him, ha is morally l)nched. When Barttum endeavored to emerge from his low sphere into a higher one, there to play his accustomed pranks, he look the first step to bring down upon him self the contempt and enmity'of upright men. It was thought by many, before he went into the Fire Atinihilator business, and allowed to be claimed for that invention, without contradiction by bim, qualities tbat it did not possess, that he was a good-natured, rollicking, mischievous fellow, but by no means bad at heart; but the public at length saw that he would stick at no outrage of public sentiment to put money in his pocket. When the whole mercantile interests of America, and men who devoted years to sci entific pursuits, where bamboozled on a sub ject to' which they justly attached so much importance, eveiy one who was blessed with a moderate Rmount of brains above his eyes, immediately understood that the tricks he had before attributed, as much to a fun-loving propensity as to a disregard of truthfulness, wore nothing more or less than the genuine uricoutrolable outbursts of selfish wickedness. Bernum did not succeed with the Fire Aumhiiator. Afterward, a few of his imitators and others who lost money by the fall of Crystal Palace stock, got him elec ted President of tbat Association ; but right minded tnen had lost confidence in him, and he failed in thai, as he will ever fail in everything that he undertakes requiring the confidence and capital of men of integrity— Mrs. E. Oakes Smith has given him a smart rap over the knuckles, on hia Baby-Show scheme, and as her letter will no doubt be extensively copied, it ia doubtful if lie can get any well-known lady to aot as a judge in hia committee. One thing is certain, which is, that he cannot by any possibility get a lady of acknowledged soc,al position to enter his Museum for such a purpose : nor would he have the temerity to ask her. it should be understood by provincials, that lor a Isdy in New York to gain and retain a foothold in the drawing-rooms of persons of refine ment, it requires something more than that her husband has advertised aaraaparilla -or bats largely, and made money by it. A few of this latter class may be found by Mr. Baruum willing to add incidentally to their husband's notoriety. A young scamp baa been arrested here for a robbery at an Irish wake,committed on the person of Ihe son of the " ould man " whose memory the assembled guests were invited to regret, aided by the inevitable rot-gut, without which no Irish corpse can be decent ly buried. Yesterday afternoon, some excitement was canted by ibe discovery of a qnantily of coun lerfeit quarter dollars, amounting to ebon five or eix bushels, in the lower part of the house, corner of Beekman and Nassau streets, which has been in the course of demolition for a week put. The basement, under the f floor of which the spurious money was dis covered, was lately occupied as an eating sa loon. * I-'BCRALOrrER.—Gen. James Irvin has of. feted to donate two hundred and fifty acres of land in Centre county, to the Pennsylvania State Agricultural Society,, for a Farmers' High School. 13f A gentleman who started on Monday of last week from Philadelphia informed ua that he reached Niagara at to o'clock on tht evening of the same day. The Wheat Cropin Okio.—T he report is that from all parts ot Ohio, the coming crop, if not injured in filling, will be larger than any preceding year. TOLLS A T UK \CH H A VK.\ COLLECTOR'S Owtca, • ) aur B °" ch Il " ven > Mi' 30, '55. I A- W. WEAVER, ESQ.: • Dear Sir —The following is a statement showing the amount of Toll &c , received at this Office during the month of April, 1855: Receipts in April, 1855, $9 491 41 Amount per last report, 3!544 80 1 Total sm't. received since Ist Den. 1854, 813 036 31 Respectfully yours, PETER ENT, Collects. On the 3d inst., by the Rev. Dr. IVaisou, Mr. SEYMOCK D. BALL, F.sq , of Minersville ochuylkill coumy, and MARY JANE, daughter of the Ute Ttioma* Pollock deceased ot Mil ton. 3J&aTia;^V In Danville on Tuesday Ihe Bth inst., Mr. DAVID ROCKAFELLER an active energetic and respected business man, aged 38 years. In Danville, on Wednesday the 9lh lost., Dr. BONHAM R. OEARHART, aged 46 years. In Huntington on the sth inst., Mrs. So- BAN, consort of Peter S. Tresoott, aged 63 years, 9 months and 7 days. tr ALL advertisements to insure insar lior. must be handed in by Tuesday evening of the week tbev are iulended to be pub lished. . " NOTICE ~ IS hereby given that my wife Lydia has left my bed and board without any provo cation or excuse, and against my consent. I am therefore compelled a' 1 hereby do cau tion all persons against giving her any credit, as I will pay no debts of her contracting af ter this date JOHN MELJCK. | Light Street, May 14, 1855—3t. Notice tp Contractors. CJF.ALED PROPOSALS will be received br ike undersigned at the House of GEO. P. STEEL, in the borough of Wilkes-Bsrre, until sundown of Thursday, Ihe 7th day of June next, for the building of a NEW LOCK nt the outlet into the pool of the Nanticoke Dam, on the Lower North Branch Division of Ihe Penn'a. Canal. Plans and specifications of the woik will be exhibited si* days previous to the letting. GEO. W. SEARCH, Supervisor, Lower N. B. Division. May 1 7, 1855. Public Sale of Heal Estate* DV virtue of an order ol the' Orphans Court ■*-* of Columbia county, Setb Shoemaker. Administrator of John Shoemaker, lale 01 Hemlock township, Columbia county, decea sed, will on Siilurilny the 16 tk day of June next at 3 o'clock, in the afternoon, expose to public sale upon the premises, A TRACT OF LAND. situate in Hemlock township, Columbia county, adjoining lands of Adam Slroup, Veniali Reese, Thomas J Vamlarslice and others, containing about Fourteen Acres, of improved land, on which there are a two story frame Dwelling House, and a bank Barn, Late the estate of th e said Johu Shoe maker. SETH SHOEMAKER, Adm'r By order of the Court. JACOB EYERLY, Clerk Bloomsburg, May 15, 1855. LISTMIF LETTERS REMAINING in the Post Office at Blooms burg, May 16th, 1855. Ar'.ley Catharine, Lewis Charles, Adams Robert, Maul Joshua, Borben C, Osier J, Bird William, Parker Clemuel T. R. Ball Joseph, Roges John, Brnvious Lucy, Roth Andrew, Rartletle Samuel, Reigliard B. F., Benham J W, Kifiledifile Jacob, Good Chas. S, Roe Francis M. Gross Adam, Schwarz Merger, Goy Joseph, Troub Jacob, Huner William, Taylor G. W. Hewellyn Hughes, Ziegler John, Henrie George, Crulher David ship Horn Angalme, Evans Philip, do Kin ley Rosolinda, Hughes David, do Kealer Esq, Portser Andreas, do Lincli Daniel, I3T Persons calling for any of the above letters will please say thev are advexise'd. PHILIP UNANGST, r. M. BOUNTY LANDS. A GREEABLY to the law of the 3d March, ** 1855, persons who have been mastered into the service of the United States, and served fourteen days, are entitled to receive a Land Warrant for 160 acres, and those per sous who have received less quantity, are now entii led to receive e Warrant sufficient to make the 160 acres. The undersigned has received the lew and the lorms adopted by the department at Washington, and will undertake the procur ing of Warrants for those who may desire his services. R. W. WEAVER. Bloomsburg, Marob 16, 1855. EXECUTORS NOTICE. TVfOTICE is hereby given that letters testa mentary upon the estate of Elizabeth Unger, late of Bloomsburg, Columbia coun- -A ty deceased, have been granted to Ihe un. designed residing also in Bloomsburg. All persons having accounts against the estate are requested to present them for Settlement, and those indebted to the decedent to make payment without delay to PHILIP UNANGST, Bloomsbuig, Ap rtl 20 '55.—6w. Executor BI&ABY <& EAGLE HOTEL* Mo- 130 North Third Ntreet. übeve Itaee PHILADELPHIA. Samuel A BRACT. GKOIGE B Baews [June 6;h 1854-iy.